Word: missing
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Dates: during 1970-1970
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Trinity College's fencing team could not hold Miss Kate Smith at bay with a broomstick, the story ran: why those boys would virtually hurt themselves on your blades. And so Harvard was going to beat the epee out of them to say nothing of the sabre and foil by employing its rinky-dinks. All-Americans Tom Keller and Larry Cetrulo would sit this one out, thinking restful thoughts against the big Ivy meet with Penn on Saturday, while the subs carved on the poor Trinity lads at their leisure...
...Miss Collins achieved a few rare moments of musical tenderness, though her vocal sentimentality was much more often usually hollow and unconvincing. She sang of peace and beauty, and lovers by the side of lilycovered country ponds. Her voice rang clear, but it failed to convey any sense of meaning in the idyllic images she created for her listeners. Judy Collins was like the classic Pine Manor girl whose glowing radiance enchants you, so that you can only nod blindly at her purrings of romantic fantasy...
...light on the river's water. Later, her voice grew mellow and wise as she sang "the colors of my father's dreams faded" and the audience could look back with her in knowing retrospect, as Gene Taylor drew his bow sadly across the strings of his bass, and Miss Collins finalized her memories, skillfully plucking out tender notes on her 12-string guitar...
...this guy [Fox] prevents us from seeing the recruiter and allows him to be here at the same time, then there really isn't any distinction between what he is doing and what the recruiter is doing," Miss Messing said...
...Publications Board, responsible for delegating about 10 different proprietorships, decided in favor of Chokel, instead of Miss Braeman. Chokel's group did have the stronger case, partly because all five men had written stories for the HarBus as early as October of their first year. Their backgrounds and journalistic experience were extensive. Chokel, for example, was the Princeton stringer for the New York Times...